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	<title>The Horn Book &#187; Claire A. Nivola</title>
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		<title>Life in the Ocean: The Story of Oceanographer Sylvia Earle</title>
		<link>http://www.hbook.com/2012/10/blogs/calling-caldecott/life-in-the-ocean-the-story-of-oceanographer-sylvia-earle-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.hbook.com/2012/10/blogs/calling-caldecott/life-in-the-ocean-the-story-of-oceanographer-sylvia-earle-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 09 Oct 2012 00:25:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Robin Smith</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Calling Caldecott]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Claire A. Nivola]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Life in the Ocean: The Story of Oceanographer Sylvia Earle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nonfiction]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.hbook.com/?p=17894</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Some of you who were here last year already know my deep love of Claire Nivola&#8217;s work. This year, instead of personal memoir, Nivola returns to nonfiction, a biography of oceanographer Silvia Earle. I heard an NPR interview with Earle the very day I received a copy of this fascinating book. Let&#8217;s take a swim [...]</p><p>The post <a href="http://www.hbook.com/2012/10/blogs/calling-caldecott/life-in-the-ocean-the-story-of-oceanographer-sylvia-earle-2/">Life in the Ocean: The Story of Oceanographer Sylvia Earle</a> appeared first on <a href="http://www.hbook.com">The Horn Book</a>.</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-17401" title="nivola_lifeintheocean_235x300" src="http://www.hbook.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/nivola_lifeintheocean_235x300.jpg" alt="nivola lifeintheocean 235x300 Life in the Ocean: The Story of Oceanographer Sylvia Earle" width="189" height="242" />Some of you who were <a href="http://www.hbook.com/2011/10/blogs/calling-caldecott/orani-my-fathers-village/">here</a> last year already know my deep love of Claire Nivola&#8217;s work.</p>
<p>This year, instead of personal memoir, Nivola returns to nonfiction, a biography of oceanographer Silvia Earle. I heard an NPR interview with Earle the very day I received a copy of this fascinating book. Let&#8217;s take a swim through it, shall we? On the title page, caught in a rectanglular frame, we see Sylvia, deep in the water, holding a seahorse the way a bird lover might hold a bluebird. The deep blue endpapers reflect on the white title page, creating a light blue feel. The edges of the frame belie the tape that once held the watercolor paper down, softening the edges a bit. (And, no, I am not going to wax poetic on every single page. But I do want you to see how slowly a committee member might observe every detail of every page.)</p>
<p>On the copyright page, a yellow and blue spotted something-or-other swims toward the dedication. The dedication (to Sylvia, her daughter and a professor) gives a little hint to the evaluator about the factual information that is to follow. (Sibert people are now waking up!) Since I mentioned Sibert, let me flip to the end, just to take a little look-see. The delicately-decorated author&#8217;s note explores more deeply the importance of the ocean and those critters swimming along the edges are now labeled. I now know that dedication page is decorated with a blue-spotted stingray! After all my whining about design last week, I am looking at backmatter that has been just as carefully conceived as the rest of the book. Even the bibliography lets us have one more image of Sylvia, this time feeding a dolphin.</p>
<p>Nivola&#8217;s use of color is what always strikes me. Sylvia starts out in green and brown New Jersey, where she explored pond life. A move to Florida means another shift in color, to the shallow greenish-blue shallow waters and moves to the aqua Pacific and and blues of the deep waters off the U.S. Virgin Islands. She also insists on showing Sylvia in perspective, allowing the young reader to really see how enormous  a humpback whale can be. Nivola&#8217;s gentle biography never bogs down in dull minutiae, but her detailed illustrations reward slow reading. A lovely variety of page designs play nicely here&#8211;I especially love the eight tiny rectangular paintings that show Sylvia in a plane, in diving gear, on a ship, in a lab, in an aqua suit and in two kinds of submersibles.  (And, just for the record, take a look at how those gutters match up on the first full spread!)</p>
<p>I have a boy in my class who loves the ocean and fish. He has noticed this book open by my computer and will be very happy to know he can borrow it.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The post <a href="http://www.hbook.com/2012/10/blogs/calling-caldecott/life-in-the-ocean-the-story-of-oceanographer-sylvia-earle-2/">Life in the Ocean: The Story of Oceanographer Sylvia Earle</a> appeared first on <a href="http://www.hbook.com">The Horn Book</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Five questions for Claire A. Nivola</title>
		<link>http://www.hbook.com/2011/10/authors-illustrators/interviews/five-questions-for-claire-a-nivola/</link>
		<comments>http://www.hbook.com/2011/10/authors-illustrators/interviews/five-questions-for-claire-a-nivola/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 06 Oct 2011 14:16:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jennifer M. Brabander</dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[Claire A. Nivola]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Notes 1011]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.hbook.com/?p=5783</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>An earlier picture book by Claire A. Nivola, Elisabeth, told about the true experience of her mother, Ruth, a Jewish child whose family fled Nazi Germany. In Orani: My Father’s Village, author-illustrator Nivola takes readers along on a remembrance of her childhood visits to the small Sardinian town where her father was born. 1. Tomie [...]</p><p>The post <a href="http://www.hbook.com/2011/10/authors-illustrators/interviews/five-questions-for-claire-a-nivola/">Five questions for Claire A. Nivola</a> appeared first on <a href="http://www.hbook.com">The Horn Book</a>.</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_5714" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 162px"><a href="http://www.hbook.com/2011/10/authors-illustrators/interviews/five-questions-for-claire-a-nivola/attachment/nivola_claire/" rel="attachment wp-att-5714"><img class="size-full wp-image-5714  " title="nivola_claire" src="http://www.hbook.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/nivola_claire.jpg" alt="nivola claire Five questions for Claire A. Nivola" width="152" height="180" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Photo: Anther Kiley</p></div>
<p>An earlier picture book by Claire A. Nivola, <em>Elisabeth</em>, told about the true experience of her mother, Ruth, a Jewish child whose family fled Nazi Germany. In <em>Orani: My Father’s Village</em>, author-illustrator Nivola takes readers along on a remembrance of her childhood visits to the small Sardinian town where her father was born.</p>
<p><strong>1</strong>. Tomie dePaola’s <em>New York Times</em> review of <em>Orani</em> called <a href="http://www.hbook.com/2011/10/blogs/calling-caldecott/orani-my-fathers-village/">your illustrations “the heart and soul and brilliance”</a> of the book, but the text also paints a vivid picture of the village. The descriptions are both childlike and child-friendly, and you’ve recounted, with a remarkable lack of sentimentality, both the good (honey and bountiful fruit) and the bad (flies and scorpions). Was it difficult keeping the nostalgia at bay while immersing yourself in your childhood memories?</p>
<p><strong>Claire Nivola</strong>: My father used to describe his native island of Sardinia with two words, <em>orrori e delizie</em>, horrors and delights. In the Mediterranean, the bright white light of the sun casts commensurately dark shadows; it is a place of contrasts. As a child, I was always eager to go back to Orani and, once there, to stay longer. A good part of its appeal was that it was so real and intense. The people were real and intense, ecstatic things happened there and terrible ones, nature itself was beautiful but not pretty.</p>
<p>Though the contrasts grew sharper as I thought back on the village to write the book, I had felt them as a child, and I knew, as children do, that this was Real Life. If I hadn’t been writing for children and if my paintings didn’t tend toward the beautification of reality, I would have made a book that was even less sentimental than this one; I would have made it “passionate without sentimentality,” the words my father used to describe his mother, the grandmother I barely knew.</p>
<p><strong>2</strong>. You’ve said about previous books of yours that the text usually comes first (either your own or another author’s), and then you create the illustrations. Was that true for <em>Orani</em>?</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.hbook.com/2011/10/authors-illustrators/interviews/five-questions-for-claire-a-nivola/attachment/orani/" rel="attachment wp-att-5724"><img class="alignright size-full wp-image-5724" title="orani" src="http://www.hbook.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/orani.jpg" alt="orani Five questions for Claire A. Nivola" width="121" height="146" /></a>CN</strong>: Yes, as always I began with the words. In fact, before I began final sketches, the idea and words and initial sketches went through many changes over many years. At first, I had thought of the story as including more of <a href="http://www.museonivola.it/en/orani-home.html">my father </a>and <em>his</em> perceptions of his hometown. A beautiful series of reminiscences he had written, entitled <em>Memorie di Orani</em>, were published in 1996 in Italy, eight years after his death. But I came to realize that I could not use, nor do justice to, his poetic retellings of his lived experience and that I had to take the task on from my own point of view entirely.</p>
<p><strong>3</strong>. The book is a distillation of the numerous trips you made to Orani as a child. Did you take your own children to visit the village when they were young, and did their perceptions of the place change how you saw it?</p>
<p><strong>CN</strong>: I took my children to Orani twice when they were young. My son and daughter, being very different people, reacted very differently, helping to confirm, now that I think of it, my own perceptions. My daughter plunged right in, instantly inebriated by the attention, the freedom of movement, the companionship of all those black-eyed eager children who were somehow related to her. Within minutes she disappeared, led by the hand, as I had once been…She loved it! My son cowered. When people in Orani see a child, they hug and kiss him or her, and children there are inured to these shows of affection. My son felt under attack. Too many people, too many of them talking in voices that are too loud. Too much food forced on him. Too much going on all at once. Instead of exhilarating, he found it overwhelming. These two reactions sum up the experience of Orani: it is more nourishment than one can get anywhere else, and it is, after a few days, more than one can take. One arrives starved for the love and vitality it can give, and one leaves drained to the core. I’m exaggerating, of course, but living in America one does become dependent on a certain quota of anonymity.</p>
<p><strong>4</strong>. In your author’s note you mention that you still go back to Orani. Were you able to travel there while working on the book?</p>
<p><strong>CN</strong>: Yes, I took one trip back after I had painted only one or two of the illustrations. I made a few notes while actually looking at doors, windows, etc. It has always been extraordinary to me how little one sees until one needs to make a drawing of something. I tell children, “try to draw your mother’s face — you’ve certainly looked at it enough — try to draw a bicycle.” The rule held for me with Orani; I knew the feel of it, but I had to go back and really look to <em>see</em> it. And even so, my illustrations do not capture the texture, ruggedness, and exhilaratingly intimate scale of that corner of the world.</p>
<p><strong>5</strong>. In the book, your child self returns home to New York City and wonders how many others in your hometown have an Orani of their own. What other insights did your visits to Orani give you? How did having that “complete world . . . just the right scale for a child” affect you as a child and/or as an adult?</p>
<p><strong>CN</strong>: Orani wasn’t the only place we traveled back to. My parents had good friends in Florence, Milan, and Rome. Sometimes we flew first to Paris. My parents were very European, and many of their friends in America were European immigrants who, like they, had left Europe in the late 1930s because of the war. So I was somewhat steeped in, and very familiar with, the different view of life held by Europeans — a kind of resignation, sometimes fatalism, at best a worldly acceptance. The notion that everything can be changed, anything can be made better, that one can start over, is very American.</p>
<p>Both perspectives are true, of course, and one needs both. Access to both is maybe the greatest gift I have gotten from straddling two continents. In Orani, what I am calling the <em>European attitude</em> ranges from (to me) infuriating resignation to mature acceptance. As my relationships with my cousins continue into maturity, they have taught me both the trap of fatalism and the wisdom of acceptance.</p>
<p>Orani also inoculated me against snobbery. My father was almost entirely self-taught, having barely attended school, and most of my relatives have never pursued higher education. Yet the depth of his and their intelligence is evident to me. The family trade was masonry, what we here might call construction work. In America, when my father made sculptures for buildings in public spaces, I sometimes assisted him, and the ease with which the two of us moved among the electricians, carpenters, plumbers, and masons on the job made me proud. Orani taught me to relate to people with directness and lack of pretence. In America, people often commented on my father’s charm and immediacy of presence. Only recently have I realized that not only most everyone in his extended family, but most everyone in the village of Orani shares this quality of genuineness.</p>
<p>Finally, from Orani, or maybe from having both Orani and America in my experience, I have come to know fully that nothing is all good or all bad. There are prices to pay for a tight-knit, traditional, organic community, for all its benefits, just as there are prices to pay for the mobility, choices, and breadth of modern life, for all its virtues. Nothing, in short, is simple.</p>
<p style="text-align: right;">—Jennifer M. Brabander</p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><a href="http://www.hbook.com/2011/10/news/notes-from-the-horn-book/notes-from-the-horn-book-october-2011">From <em>Notes from the Horn Book</em>, October 2011</a></p>
<p>The post <a href="http://www.hbook.com/2011/10/authors-illustrators/interviews/five-questions-for-claire-a-nivola/">Five questions for Claire A. Nivola</a> appeared first on <a href="http://www.hbook.com">The Horn Book</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Orani: My Father&#8217;s Village</title>
		<link>http://www.hbook.com/2011/10/blogs/calling-caldecott/orani-my-fathers-village/</link>
		<comments>http://www.hbook.com/2011/10/blogs/calling-caldecott/orani-my-fathers-village/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 04 Oct 2011 00:54:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Robin Smith</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Calling Caldecott]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Claire A. Nivola]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Orani]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.hbook.com/?p=5633</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>It’s time to look at a quiet book, the kind of book that kind of sneaks up on you. In some ways, it’s the opposite of graphically stunning Where’s Walrus? that Lolly just presented. A tale of reverse migration, Claire Nivola’s story recounts her frequent trips to her father’s village in Sardinia from the States. [...]</p><p>The post <a href="http://www.hbook.com/2011/10/blogs/calling-caldecott/orani-my-fathers-village/">Orani: My Father&#8217;s Village</a> appeared first on <a href="http://www.hbook.com">The Horn Book</a>.</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img alt=" Orani: My Fathers Village" src="http://t1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRMLZhFmzsEjTCwgI4ej_rLQ5SHvVSaTeKWudNMa0uBfOgde-It" title="Orani" class="alignleft" width="152" height="179" /></p>
<p>It’s time to look at a quiet book, the kind of book that kind of sneaks up on you. In some ways, it’s the opposite of graphically stunning Where’s Walrus? that Lolly just presented. </p>
<p> A tale of reverse migration, Claire Nivola’s story recounts her frequent trips to her father’s village in Sardinia from the States. While the text is simple and heartfelt, evoking the beauty of the island and the town of Orani, it’s the illustrations that drew me into this story. </p>
<p>Naïve watercolor and gouache (which remind me of Barbara Cooney’s work) follow the young Claire (wearing a red dress in each spread) as she moves among her Italian family in a town time seems to have left untouched. It’s the tiny details that sold me: the cousins with their arms around one another, the fascination with a dead body, the flatbreads stacked, the flies, a wedding.  The full spreads showing the village from a distance invite long inspection, perhaps with a magnifying glass to see the scaffolding on a house and the tiny suggestions of people walking up the mountain.  This town is alive with music, food, dance and the play of the generations together.</p>
<p>Will the committee appreciate the tiny details of this illustrated memoir?  Will they see how the scale of village life was perfect for little Claire and appreciate how she interprets that life through her folk-like, but never nostalgic, illustrations? What do you think? </p>
<p>The post <a href="http://www.hbook.com/2011/10/blogs/calling-caldecott/orani-my-fathers-village/">Orani: My Father&#8217;s Village</a> appeared first on <a href="http://www.hbook.com">The Horn Book</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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